Examples of Female Athlete Triad in the following topics:
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Female Athlete Triad: Disordered Eating, Amenorrhea, and Premature Osteoporosis
- Female Athlete Triad is a syndrome in which eating disorders (or low energy availability), amenorrhoea/oligomenorrhoea, and decreased bone mineral density (osteoporosis and osteopenia) are present.
- The Female Athlete Triad is a syndrome of three interrelated conditions that exist on a continuum of severity.
- In the case of Female Athlete Triad, low energy availability may be coupled with eating disorders, but not necessarily.
- Women taking part in these sports may be at an increased risk for developing Female Athlete Triad.
- Female athletes are often at risk for the female athlete triad
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Infection
- Infections of the integumentary system include athlete's foot and herpes simplex.
- Athlete's foot can be treated by a number of pharmaceutical creams, as well as with oral antifungals.
- Hygiene plays an important role in managing an athlete's foot infection.
- Condom use is much more effective at preventing male to female transmission than vice-versa.
- Differentiate between the integumentary system infections of athlete's foot and herpes simplex
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Stelae in the Greek High Classical Period
- A female attendant in simple dress stands before her holding a small box, from which Hegeso chooses jewelry.
- The Grave Stele of an Athlete (early fourth century BCE) from the island of Delos depicts a male athlete receiving lekythos of oil from a male youth.
- The athlete's body is reminiscent of Polykleitos's Doryphoros.
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Portals of Microbe Entry
- In sexual transmission, infection originates directly between surfaces in contact during intercourse (the usual route for bacterial infections and those infections causing sores) or from secretions (semen or the fluid secreted by the excited female).
- Some diseases that are transmissible by direct contact include Athlete's foot and impetigo.
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Sonata Form: The Development
- One key difference between rock and classical harmony is that chords in pop/rock music are almost always root-position triads or seventh chords.
- It has been around for some time but became increasingly common beginning in the mid-1990s with female singer/songwriters like Sarah McLachlan, Jewel, and Joan Osborne (hence the name).
- An example is "What About Love" by Heart, which has an obvious D-minor intro, a D-minor/F-major verse using the sensitive female progression, and a chorus obviously in F major.
- Also, instead of moving in root-position triads, some composers and songwriters will invert every other chord:
- See the above video for song examples (though be careful: halfway through the song, he changes to a rotation of the sensitive female progression).
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Ear Training Skill
- If you play a melody instrument (one that plays only one note at a time), there are different bits of information that help you recognize what the next note will be: how far it is from the note you are on (see Interval), where it is in the key (see Beginning Harmonic Analysis) or where it is in the chord (see Triads).
- (For example, in the familiar song from The Sound of Music that begins "Do, a deer, a female deer
- ", all the intervals in the phrase "a female deer" are major thirds, and every interval in the phrase "someday I'll wish upon a star" in the song "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" is a minor third. ) The tune should be very familiar, so when trying to hear a tritone, some people will prefer thinking of the beginning of "The Simpsons" theme; others will prefer the beginning of "Maria" from West Side Story.